The Chrysler ME Four Twelve

0-100 in 6.2 seconds, 0-60 in 2.9, Quarter mile of 10.6 @ 136 mph... and all put together in record time

The ME 4-12 was not a concept car, but the prototype for a car that was never approved.

Around 300 Chrysler ME 4-12 cars were to be built each year, leaning on carbon fiber and aluminum. Road testing was scheduled for late January 2004, with production to start within two years. The concept cars / prototypes were built in the United States by Metalcrafters; the lead engineer was from Chrysler and the lead suppliers were North American. Most off the shelf parts appear to be from Chrysler, aside from the engine.

The major shortcoming of the ME-412 was that it easily beat the Mercedes SLR, which was years in the making, and far more expensive to develop; Dieter reportedly was screamed at for this, and it may even have been one of the reasons why Wolfgang Bernhard was “de-selected” from the Mercedes-head job. The ME-412 itself was cancelled, reportedly as an embarassment to Mercedes.

ME-412 team effectiveness (by Bob Sheaves)

There were just eleven people working on the ME412 from Chrysler (out of about 10,000 at CTC, FREC, and JTE), according to press preleases. There were a handful of suppliers, under ten that have admitted to in the trade magazines.

In my opinion the most important piece of R&D, Ricardo was handling the people or “warm bodies” doing the work, under Chrysler direction and supervision. Approximately 30 people (2 from DCX, maybe) would be involved with this work, including design, engineering, manufacturing feasibility, testing, and process.

For this team to even make one driveable vehicle (or several, as an article stated the car is under development - which, by inference, means there is at least one car and probably five transmission assemblies — at least one for manufacturing development, at least one in a mule car, and least one in the show car, and at least two in dyno testing) in under 18 months is nothing short of phenomenal — especially given the money spent so far, which is about average for a non-functioning show car by GM.

The return on investment of this kind of research (such as the ME-412) is far more important that most realize!

More Chrysler ME-412 details and photos

The ME stands for “mid-engined,” where the quad-turbo, AMG V-12 is positioned. A highly modified Mercedes powerplant, it was reportedly designed for Chrysler, and was rated at 850 bhp @ 5750 rpm, with 850 lb-ft. (1150 N-m) of torque between 2500 and 4500 rpm on premium unleaded fuel. Use of the AMG engine was dictated largely by the need for high power with light weight (around 500 lb) and at reasonable development cost; the Chrysler V10 would have been much larger and heavier.

With a curb weight of just 2880 lbs. (1310 kg), the ME Four-Twelve has the weight-to-power ratio of 3.4 lbs/bhp — a new record. In speed runs, the Chrysler ME Four-Twelve went from 0-60 mph in 2.9 seconds, 0-100 mph in 6.2 seconds, and blistered through the quarter mile in 10.6 seconds at 135 mph.

The car was designed to achieve outstanding thermal performance under extreme conditions. The 7-speed Ricardo double clutch transmission was developed for the car, with Chrysler’s own double wet-clutch technology and 200 millisecond shift times. The double wet-clutch technology appears to come from Chrysler. (An anonymous Chrysler employee wrote, "I cannot believe that Chrysler didn't get the credit for this transaxle! To be fair, it fits with its replacement by the junk MB controls and system.")

The interior is relatively spacious with 37.2 in (942 mm) of headroom, and 42.7 in (1085 mm) of legroom. A large glass roof panel extends from the windshield to the rear header. Passenger-side adjustable foot support helps keep the co-pilot in position during extreme cornering maneuvers

The ME-412 easily accommodates drivers in a wide range of heights, and provides strong access to driving controls; it includes an F1 racing style paddle shifter.

Styling was done by Brian Nielander, who worked with engineers and aerodynamics experts to shape the interior and exterior.